Kobani is about to fall to jihadists - Turkey's president

A Islamic State fighter walks near a black flag belonging to the Islamic State near the Syrian town of Kobani, pictured from the Turkish-Syrian border near the southeastern town of Suruc in Sanliurfa province, October 6, 2014. (Reuters / Umit Bektas) / Reuters

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan has said the besieged Syrian-Turkish border town of Kobani is about to fall into jihadist hands, as it's in the midst of a fierce battle with Islamic State terrorists, numbering around 9,000 heavily-armed fighters.

The next 24 hours could see 5,000 people dead, according to
Kurdish intelligence reports. Since the start of the advance
toward the city 400 lives have already been lost.

"The problem of ISIS (Islamic State) ... cannot be solved via
air bombardment. Right now ... Kobani is about to fall," the
Turkish president said during a visit to a camp holding Syrian
refugees. "We had warned the West. We wanted three things.
No-fly zone, a secure zone parallel to that, and the training of
moderate Syrian rebels," he said.

IS fighters advanced into the southwestern part of the town
located on the border of Syria and Turkey. They reportedly
occupied several buildings at opposite ends of the town in order
to carry out attacks, according to Reuters and local border
forces.

Heavy weaponry and shells are being used. One senior Kurdish
official told Reuters that last night saw “a violent clash.
We have fought hard to keep them out of town,” adding that
the main flashpoints are “on the outskirts and toward the
center.”

Taking the strategic town would allow the Islamic State militia
to link up its forces more easily in Syria and northern Iraq,
which they aim to turn into an Islamic Caliphate.

Even Turkey, who until very recently has been on the sidelines of
the fight happening on its doorstep, has positioned tanks on a
hilltop overlooking the Syrian town. But Erdogan says Turkey
would only intervene if its soldiers guarding the historic Syrian
landmark Turkey considers its own were attacked.

The forecast that Kobani will fall comes amid a realization by
both foreign and Kurdish forces that airstrikes on the border
have not been enough and led to urgent calls for speedy
deployment of boots on the ground.

Rooz Bahjat, a senior Kurdish intelligence official with the
Kurdish regional government in Iraq, told The Atlantic by
telephone that “a terrible slaughter is coming. If they take
the city, we should expect to have 5,000 dead within 24 or 36
hours… It will be worse than Sinjar."

Sinjar, an ethnically mixed settlement of Yazidi Kurds, Turkmens,
Christians and Shabak, was the site of one of the worst massacres
carried out by Islamic State. As many as 200,000 people were
trapped in the mountains there without food, water or shelter.

Bahjat agreed that airstrikes were not enough, and were
ineffective and limited in scope in the area.

Experts say it is difficult to picture how Kurdish forces could
gain the upper hand over the next 24 hours: for one, they are
outnumbered. They also have no heavy weaponry – unlike the IS,
which has tanks and grenade launchers.

Desperation has reached such proportions that a female Kurdish
suicide bomber has carried out an attack, killing 27 Islamic State
fighters. She was one of a few young Kurdish women posted on
lookout towers, watching the border.
Many of them are of high-school age.

There are conflicting reports as to whether Turkey is engaging
with IS at present. The country has received widespread criticism
for wanting to keep out of the fight, but RT learned on Monday
morning that several tank shells had been fired by Turkish forces
overnight at jihadist positions.

"It's unbelievable—Turkey is in NATO, so you literally have
NATO watching what is happening in this town. Everyone can see
it— the TV cameras are there, watching. It's terrible,"
Bahjat said.